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<blockquote data-quote="Glade Riven" data-source="post: 5498856" data-attributes="member: 86468"><p>The Night Angel Trilogy by Brent Weeks. I've read the first two books, and they're very good, although I'd rate them at least on a teen level (there's some nasty stuff that happens, especially in the first book). Depends on how mature the kids are, I guess, and only you can make that call.</p><p> </p><p>Anne McCaffery's Dragonriders of Pern is a good series (and fairly kid freindly), although it skirts the edge between scifi and fantasy. Very low magic (dragons and related creatures have a few "psionic" powers - teleportation, telepathy/empathy, and possibly telekinisis - but the dragons aren't D&D dragons - telepathy is usually limited to just each other and their own rider; there are some other restraints put on their powers as well), and most books have medieval-level technology. Pern is a lost colony that was reduced to medieval conditions thanks to a deadly organism called thread, which rains from space and eats everything. Dragons were engineered from a smaller dragonette native to the planet (think pseudodragon) with the last of their technology to burn up thread before it hits the ground. The original trilogy starts off quite a number of millinium later, with everyone living in castle-like holds and little idea on where they came from.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Glade Riven, post: 5498856, member: 86468"] The Night Angel Trilogy by Brent Weeks. I've read the first two books, and they're very good, although I'd rate them at least on a teen level (there's some nasty stuff that happens, especially in the first book). Depends on how mature the kids are, I guess, and only you can make that call. Anne McCaffery's Dragonriders of Pern is a good series (and fairly kid freindly), although it skirts the edge between scifi and fantasy. Very low magic (dragons and related creatures have a few "psionic" powers - teleportation, telepathy/empathy, and possibly telekinisis - but the dragons aren't D&D dragons - telepathy is usually limited to just each other and their own rider; there are some other restraints put on their powers as well), and most books have medieval-level technology. Pern is a lost colony that was reduced to medieval conditions thanks to a deadly organism called thread, which rains from space and eats everything. Dragons were engineered from a smaller dragonette native to the planet (think pseudodragon) with the last of their technology to burn up thread before it hits the ground. The original trilogy starts off quite a number of millinium later, with everyone living in castle-like holds and little idea on where they came from. [/QUOTE]
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